Weaver v. Hailey

416 So. 2d 311
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 1982
Docket8702
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 416 So. 2d 311 (Weaver v. Hailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weaver v. Hailey, 416 So. 2d 311 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

416 So.2d 311 (1982)

L. C. WEAVER, Plaintiff & Appellee,
v.
Jackie Roy HAILEY, et al., Defendants & Appellants.

No. 8702.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

June 1, 1982.
Rehearing Denied July 21, 1982.

*312 Gahagan & Gahagan, M. F. Gahagan, Natchitoches, for plaintiff & appellee.

Watson, Murchison, Crews & Arthur, R. Raymond Arthur, Natchitoches, for defendants & appellants.

Before CULPEPPER, CUTRER, SWIFT, STOKER and DOUCET, JJ.

CULPEPPER, Judge.

This is a petitory action. The plaintiff, L. C. Weaver, claims ownership by record title of one acre of land of which defendants, the Haileys, are in possession. The Haileys filed an answer alleging ownership by the acquisitive prescriptions of 30 years and 10 years of the 40 acres in which plaintiff alleges the one acre in dispute is located. But defendants prayed only that plaintiff's demands be rejected. They did not file a reconventional demand for recognition of their ownership. The district judge recognized the Haileys as the owners of the 40 acres less and except the one acre in dispute, and he recognized the plaintiff, L. C. Weaver, as owner of the one acre. The defendants appealed.

The substantial issues are: (1) Did the plaintiff sustain his burden of proving ownership by record title to the one acre in dispute? (2) Since defendants have not prayed for recognition of their ownership by acquisitive prescription and have not filed a reconventional demand, is the issue of their ownership before us? (3) If the *313 issue of defendants' ownership is before us, have they proved acquisitive prescription of 10 years as to the one acre in dispute?

PLAINTIFF'S EVIDENCE

Plaintiff's proof of his record title consists of the following:

(1) A cash sale from Robert Richard to H. L. Weaver recorded on August 27, 1946 conveying property described as "beginning at a point on the north line of SW ¼ of SW ¼ sec. 26 Tp 12 Rg 7 on the west side of the Creston-Ashland highway and running west 35 yards thence south 70 yards thence east 35 yards to the highway thence north to point of beginning containing one-half acres more or less."
(2) An act of correction from Robert Richard to H. L. Weaver dated and recorded in October of 1980, correcting the description of the 1946 sale to read as follows: "... beginning at a point on the North line of the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 26, Township 12 North, Range 7 West, Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, on the West side of Creston-Ashland Highway; thence run West 35 yards; thence run South 140 yards; thence run East 35 yards to said highway; thence run North 140 yards to the point of beginning."
(3) A cash sale from Herman L. Weaver to L. C. Weaver dated October 30, 1980 and recorded on June 26, 1981 conveying the one acre as described in the October, 1980 act of correction.

L. C. Weaver testified that immediately after his brother, H. L. Weaver, purchased the property in 1946, they organized a club, apparently for the purpose of hunting and fishing on nearby Black Lake, and they built a small club house on the one acre. In 1949 they sold the building and it was moved from the land.

L. C. Weaver also testified that when Mr. E. D. Mallett, defendants' author in title, built the fence around Mallett's property in 1952, the fence included the one acre on which the club house had been located. Weaver admitted that the fence built by Mallett in 1952 was maintained by the Haileys after they purchased their property from Mallett in 1953, and that the fence is still on the same lines.

Herman L. Weaver, who originally purchased the one acre from Robert Richard in 1946, testified that he left the State of Louisiana during the 1950s and returned during the 1960s, at which time he talked to Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roy Hailey about their fence enclosing his one acre. He says he went to see Mrs. Lena Hailey again in 1979 and asked her to move the fence, since it had been there almost 30 years. In 1980, they obtained from Robert Richard the correction deed described above, and Herman sold the property to his brother, L. C. Weaver.

L. C. Weaver testified that during the latter part of 1980 he and Jackie Roy Hailey discussed a lease of the one acre by Weaver to Hailey. Weaver had his attorney draw a written lease, but Hailey, on the advice of his attorney, refused to sign. Jackie Roy Hailey's version of this lease incident is that when he was clearing his land to plant Christmas trees during 1980, he learned that the Weavers were claiming one acre, although he didn't know the location of the one acre, and he decided to try to lease it. However, he was later advised by his attorney not to sign a lease.

DEFENDANTS' EVIDENCE

The defendants have abandoned their claim by the acquisitive prescription of 30 years. They claim ownership by the acquisitive prescription of 10 years based on a sale from Elvin Dale Mallett to Lee Roy Hailey and his wife, Lena V. Hailey, dated April 1, 1953 and recorded on April 23, 1953, conveying the following described property:

"Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 26, Township 12 North, Range 7 West, less one acre, being 39 acres more or less in Ward 2, Natchitoches Parish, La. with all improvements thereon, including house furnishings and 17 goats;"

*314 In February of 1952, Mr. E. D. Mallett employed Lynn Boyd Weaver to "run the lines" of the SW/4 of the SW/4 of said Section 26. Lynn Boyd Weaver was not a surveyor, but he had experience running lines for lumber companies. He testified that on February 29, 1952 he blazed the lines of the approximately 40 acres. At the trial, Weaver identified a sketch of his field notes, filed in evidence, purporting to show the lines he blazed around the 40 acres. He said he ran the lines from corners marked by iron pipes placed there by a licensed surveyor. During his testimony, Weaver drew on the sketch his estimate of the location of the Ashland-Creston highway, running generally across the north and the east lines of the 40 acres, so as to place approximately 7 acres east of the highway and 32 acres west of the highway. Weaver also said that Mallett did not tell him to exclude one acre, and that he knew nothing about the location of the one acre, so he did not show it in his field notes.

Lynn Weaver also testified that during 1952 Mr. E. D. Mallett built a fence on the lines which he had blazed. Other evidence in the record shows that actually only the 32 acres west of the highway were fenced by Mallett in 1952. The 7 acres east of the highway were not fenced.

Mrs. Lena Hailey Thompson testified that she was married to Lee Roy Hailey when they bought 39 acres from E. D. Mallett in 1953. She stated that at the time of the purchase neither she nor her husband knew that their deed excepted one acre, that before they bought the land Mr. Mallett showed them on the ground the location of the fence around the 32 acres west of the highway and showed them the unfenced 7 acres on the east side of the highway, and stated to them that was the property they were buying. She testified she did not learn until "a year or so" after they purchased the land that H. L. Weaver claimed one acre.

The evidence shows that immediately after Lee Roy Hailey and his wife purchased the land from Mallett in 1953 they moved into the home on the 32 acres and Mrs. Lena Hailey Thompson and her children, defendants in the present suit, have lived there and maintained the fence around the 32 acres ever since.

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Bluebook (online)
416 So. 2d 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-hailey-lactapp-1982.